An important part of the violin is the violin fingerboard. This is the part of the violin where you place your fingers in order to pitch the notes. You produce the notes by pushing down on particular strings with your fingers. The music that a violin produces is so beautiful and so varied it is hard to believe that a violin only has four strings on the fingerboard. Not only do you have to know which fingers to position on which strings you also have to know exactly where to position your fingers on the fingerboard.

We have all seen a guitarist playing a guitar. We know how the guitarist moves his or her fingers across the fingerboard. Guitarists have it easier than violinists. Guitars have frets that indicate where they should place their fingers but violinists have no indicators at all. It really is a matter of practicing until you instinctively know where to place your fingers. The more you practice your fingerboard moves the more your violin will become a part of your body. It is via the violin fingerboard and the bow that you are able to express yourself through the music. When you start playing the violin you will do so in a mechanical way but once you really know the fingerboard and how to use it you will become more expressive and more individual.

You are not going to master the fingerboard overnight. It is going to take hours and hours of practice. Even the most accomplished violin player will tell you that practice never ends. The more you love playing your violin the more you want to practice so that you can keep on improving. This is the natural process. The more time you spend practicing the notes on your violin fingerboard the more confident you will become and before you know it you will be ready to start performing for family and friends.

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